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Quantum fluctuations in space, science, exploration and other cosmic fields... served up regularly by MSNBC.com science editor Alan Boyle since 2002.

Alan Boyle covers the physical sciences, anthropology, technological innovation and space science and exploration for MSNBC.com. He is a winner of the AAAS Science Journalism Award, the NASW Science-in-Society Award and other honors; a contributor to "A Field Guide for Science Writers"; and a member of the board of the Council for the Advancement of Science Writing.

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Vote for the weirdest science

Posted: Tuesday, December 23, 2008 7:37 PM by Alan Boyle


From left: Fame Pictures, Oxford U. Press, Texas A&M
The weirdest science stories of the year included, from left, the four-eared cat who
sparked an Internet sensation; the world's oldest marijuana stash; and the
rediscovery of the Furby-like pygmy tarsier, which was thought to be extinct.

How do you follow an act like glow-in-the-dark kitties? The competition for our second annual Weird Science Awards includes an ample helping of animal weirdness, ranging from see-through fish to a four-eared feline. But 2008 saw plenty of all-too-human oddities as well, including the world's oldest marijuana stash and the "lost" Amazon tribe that wasn't.

Our awards program is meant to salute the past year's scientific foibles: the sorts of discoveries that merit a wink and a nod (such as the sex habits of spiders), a goofy smile (such as the study that found buyers prefer cars that look angry) or a roll of the eyes (such as this year's trumped-up Bigfoot hoax).

Here's how it works: We're serving up a list of two dozen science stories from the past year that caused a spike in the weirdness meter. Do as much research as you need to do, then register your ironically unscientific vote for the story you think most deserves the Weird Science Award. Feel free to check back on the Live Vote to see how your favorite is faring. We don't mind if you recruit your friends for a little online ballot-box stuffing.

If we've missed any science story you think is a contender for a Weirdy, feel free to cast a write-in ballot as a comment below. Get 10 other commenters (e.g., friends) to support your nomination, and we'll add it to the official ballot. The top 10 vote-getters will be celebrated in a Weirdy gallery to be published with much fanfare (and maybe even a caveman musical salute) during the week of Jan. 5.

And so, without further ado, here are this year's 24 Weirdy finalists:

Scientists create mind reader: Brain scans can tell what you're looking at, or perhaps even dreaming about.

Size matters to sex-crazed spiders: Small is beautiful when you're a male spider looking for a mate.

When pandas attack: Ah, pandas ... so cute, so cuddly, so peaceful ... Hey, he bit my leg!

Dogs know when you're being unfair: Canines, like kids, get huffy when they're slighted.

Oldest pot stash totally busted: 2,700-year-old grave in Gobi Desert yields almost two pounds of marijuana.

Scientists turn into virtual body snatchers: Out-of-body experiences created in the lab.

Male lizards do push-ups to impress the babes: Exhausting ritual serves as visual display.

Real-life Furbys rediscovered: Rare pygmy tarsiers are spotted in Indonesia for the first time in more than 70 years. (I realize there are other, more common species of tarsiers that are native to the Philippines and other regions of the world, and are just as weird-looking.)

Meet the Flintsteins: Scientists find the 4,600-year-old remains of a nuclear family in a German grave.

Ancient joke book parrots Monty Python: A 1,600-year-old Greek document contains a version of the British comedy group's famous "dead parrot" sketch.

Scientists create 'nanobama': President-elect memorialized microscopically in carbon nanotubes. Have a look.

Original 'Gladiator' tomb found: Second-century monument honors Roman hero who inspired Russell Crowe's movie character.

Shark's virgin birth confirmed: DNA shows that a shark pup received no genetic contribution from a father.

People love angry-faced cars: Research reveals that car buyers humanize their purchases, and prefer a dominant, masculine look. 

Some pig: Sow nurses tiger cubs: Ukrainian pig looks after cats abandoned by their mother.

Whale whisperer teaches beluga to 'talk': In Japan, beluga whale makes different sounds when shown different objects. What's the whale word for "weird"?

It's not easy being a green polar bear: After swimming in algae-laden waters, Japanese zoo animals cause a stir.  

Four-eared feline finds fame: Yoda becomes an Internet star, but experts say four-eared furry friends are not all that uncommon.

Bigfoot is just a gorilla suit: Big scientific find turns out to be bigger scientific fake.

Tree shrew is a world-class beer drinker: Tiny mammals live on the equivalent of an all-beer diet but never get drunk.

Cavemen had an ear for music: Prehistoric humans created their paintings in cave chambers where singing would sound best.

'Lost tribe' isn't that lost: Brazilian researchers draw attention to "uncontacted" tribe that they've known about for decades. 

Penguin gets a wetsuit: Biologists create a suit that lets an aging, balding bird swim again.

Scientists breed see-through fish: It may sound frivolous, but these fish could help with the fight against cancer.

NOW CLICK HERE TO VOTE FOR THE WEIRDEST

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Comments

Don't forget a new method of emiting X-ray by peeling scotch tape.  Though it wasn't X-ray, nor scotch tape
but more tan 2 decades ago, one of my professors and fellow senior students at a Japanese university were reseraching the mechanism of emition of visible light by peeling off duct tape.  
I think the Matriarchal Bonobos deserve a shot here. They are the only primates led by females, afterall. Nonviolent, they settle their troubles using sex and food. Sounds good to me!
The ancient pot really made me chuckle when I read about it recently - couldn’t believe it was still green!

Also - the OBE VR studies have been perking my interest because I'm a game art and design major in my last year of college.  Serious VR is going to be an inevitable venture for the games industry as far as I'm concerned.

The story that really caught my attention that's not present here, although I'm not sure it would be considered 'weird science', would be the recent genetics article detailing research into the literal masses of mysterious DNA that humans, even animals, have that we have no idea what they're even for exactly.  There were some awesome speculations in that article - DNA that might be time, date, or event triggered and such.

Great stuff as usual, Alan.  Can’t wait to get the ball rolling again with some CERN updates! :)

Happy holidays and all the best from GA!
glow in the dark cats
How could one such as I, who last sat in a science classroom in 1976, pass up a chance to cast my "ironically unscientific vote"?  So many choices, though.  Female spiders go for the largest post-coital snack.  Who knew?  Dogs have personalities complete with the ability to pout.  Animals who live in the wild or are kept behind bars in a zoo may bite when approached.  And, all those Baby Boomers out there with a doobie or two stashed away in the attic next to their favorite black light posters and honest to goodness albums, be warned:  fire those puppies up b before they go bad!  Males of all species strut whatever stuff they have.  Who'd 'a thunk it?  Men have sought dolby surround sound in their self made home theaters longer than we could have imagined.  Words fail me when I ponder the tiger cubs nursing from a sow, but I'll bet there'd be some snappy observation in the Roman joke book,could they have but heard of it.  Since the story of the military trying to create artificial ESP didn't make the cut, I cast my vote for those world's most brilliant of minds who have taken Play-Doh to a remarkable molecular level and can form nano-models of faces and musical instruments.      
The 2700 yr old pot shash gets my vote.
Why would you do science on a glow in the dark cats. It's wierd and cool at the same time so the glow in the dark cats get my vote.
Hi all...the glow in the dark kittens (now cats) were from the previous year, 2007. My pick for 2008 is the mind reading machine...scientist need a cap on the skull today, but in 5 years...there will be hand held "mind readers". I just placed my order on mindreaders.com.
Its disgusting to make cats that glow in the dark.  They are loving, intelligent, sentient beings, and deserve the same respect and ethical consideration as humans.  I hope there is a special place in hell for the people who think this sort of thing is moral.  How about we start "making" people that have consciences.  My vote goes to the belugas...though I doubt they've been "taught" to speak.  They already have a language with which they communicate with one another.
Global Warming wins hands down!
That mad scientist Al Gore gets my vote!
X-rays from scotch tape gets my vote also.
John Skeptic...Since when can anyone think Al Gore is a scientist, mad or otherwise. And also, global warming isn't apart of this talk. If Al Gore is the only defense you have then that is rather unfortunate.
Nothing is more terrifying than the mind-reading story. That may not meet the weird test, but it has prospects for being used by governments, intelligence agencies, police departments, major criminals and anyone else who will be able to afford the equipment. That also includes stores that will be able to read your mind while you are going through the aisles and changing the displays and ads to aim at your brain and convince you to buy something you would otherwise never consider buying.

If you can read it, how long will it be before you can transmit it to the brain? Orwell was a little premature in his book.  
My second vote is the pygmy tarsier.  Smallest thing with a close corollary to the human hand I have ever seen..and probably you too.
Whoa, Sunny, ease up.  The researchers weren't seeking to do something stupid such as make Halloween toys, but seeking to advance research.  And what's so hell-deserving about making something glow, even a living creature?  A parallel, if an imperfect one: some years ago, I had to have a skin cancer removed.  As a precautionary move, my oncologist then had me take an MRI, which involved me having to drink loads of a dye beforehand that made my upper and lower GI tracts "glow," in effect, in the resulting image.  And was I ever glad the technology existed, especially when the doctor gave me a clean bill of health.

My vote goes for the "mind-reading" story, though at the same time, it does have some Orwellian implications of no small concern -- if science actually reaches the point someone can really read another person's mind, especially if that will be able to be done on the sly.
My write-in is for the Montauk Monster
I vote for the 2,700 year old marijuana stash as the weirdest, were these people going to smoke the stuff in the after life?
It would be safer for my cats if they did glow in the dark.  I can't tell you how many times I've almost tripped on one of them because I didn't see them.
It isn't a 4-eared cat, it is a 4-earlobed cat.  Huge difference here...
hmmm - even the wolds oldest stash was stoed in a ziplock bag.  How did they know?
and the winner is....?
Nothing is more terrifying than the mind-reading story. That may not meet the weird test, but it has prospects for being used by governments, intelligence agencies, police departments, major criminals and anyone else who will be able to afford the equipment. That also includes stores that will be able to read your mind while you are going through the aisles and changing the displays and ads to aim at your brain and convince you to buy something you would otherwise never consider buying...


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